Future luggage from Samsonite may check itself in and follow you around

The unremitting grind of airport travel — waiting in line for security behind a slow-moving river of humanity, standing for hours at a dingy and decrepit gate, and settling for edible-but-not-entirely-appetizing terminal food-court fare — is about about to get the tiniest bit better. The Daily Mail reports that Samsung is teaming up with luggage-maker Samsonite to produce a carry-on bag with inbuilt circuitry that checks in, tracks, and even transports itself autonomously, potentially meaning one less major barrier between you and your final destination.

The prototypical baggage, according to the report, uses GPS and other hardware to precisely track its location. Right now it can relay that data to a smartphone or tablet in raw form, but it may eventually make smarter use of it — the two companies envision bags that alert their owners when they’ve left plane storage and reached the baggage carousel, for example. They may also reduce theft by chiming when they’ve been opened or have left the range of a paired device.

But that’s not all. “Smart luggage will be able to communicate with you but it needs to be able to do much more than just give its location,” Samsonite chief executive Ramesh Tainwala told the Daily Mail, and to that end the company’s developing motorized, self-propelling luggage. Still very much in the early stages, such bags could, thanks to retrofitted motors and proximity sensors, follow travelers from a configurable number of inches behind them.

That concept is still a stretch — thanks in large part to the bulky, 20-kilo motors required, and Tainwala admitted it “[isn’t] quite there yet” — but more firmly within reach is automated check-in. Samsonite is working with airlines on an integrated solution that’ll bypass the need to stop by the desk by communicating ownership, airline, and destination to self-service baggage weighing stations. It’s not a perfect solution — the company’s only working with Emirates, Lufthansa, and KLM Air France right now because airline systems are largely incompatible — but Tainwala says there’s no better fit for the bags’ wireless capabilities. “If you can communicate with your bag then why not the airlines?”

An unspecified future launch will likely align with Samsonite’s personalization program. Over the next few weeks, the company will debut an online portal that’ll allow customers to engrave their name, change the colors of locks and handles, and emblazon images on bags. “The most important thing is luggage must be seen as a beautiful object of desire and part of your personality,” said Tainwala. “When you walk with luggage it says something about you.”

Choosing the right laptop bag is no easy feat -- after all, no one likes to second-guess themselves. Here are some of the best laptop bags on the market, from backpacks to sleeves, so you can get it right the first time around.

A rocket has launched over Virginia's eastern shore, carrying supplies to the International Space Station (ISS). Inside the spacecraft are supplies for the ISS itself and the crew onboard, such as scientific equipment and food.

The OSIRIS-REx spacecraft, launched in September 2016, is closing in on its target of the Bennu asteroid. The craft has now unfurled its robotic arm, called the Touch-and-Go Sample Acquisition Mechanism (TAGSAM), and tested it successfully.

Cyber Monday is still a ways off, but it's never too early to start planning ahead. With so many different deals to choose from during one of the biggest shopping holidays of the year, going in with a little know-how makes all the…

To make really smart transportation choices, more precise location data will have to be integrated with citywide transportation data. Here’s how one company is mapping the world by using just three words.

A team of astronomers from the University of Cambridge have discovered a strange galaxy next door to the Milky Way. The dwarf galaxy, named Antlia 2, is dark and dim and gives out much less light than expected.

A huge crater has been discovered beneath the ice of Greenland, and is thought to be the result of a meteorite impact millions of years ago. The crater is one of the largest ever discovered, measuring 19 miles across.